G²OAT seminar: Establishing Herd Immunity is Hard Even in Simple Geometric Networks

When

15. 5. 2023
13:00

Where

Room TH:A-1247

Thákurova 7, Prague 6

Record

YouTube

Michal Dvořák, a student of the FIT CTU master programme, will speak at the regular Monday seminar of the G²OAT group. In his talk, he will discuss how hard it is to establish herd immunity even in simple geometric networks.

Event website

Abstract

We study the following model of disease spread in a social network. In the beginning, all individuals are either infected or healthy. Next, in discrete rounds, the disease spreads in the network from infected to healthy individuals such that a healthy individual gets infected if and only if a sufficient number of its direct neighbours are already infected.

We represent the social network as a graph. Inspired by the real-world restrictions in the current epidemic, especially by social and physical distancing requirements, we restrict ourselves to networks that can be represented as geometric intersection graphs.

We show that finding a minimal vertex set of initially infected individuals to spread the disease in the whole network is computationally hard, already on unit disk graphs. Hence, to provide some algorithmic results, we focus ourselves on simpler geometric graph families, such as interval graphs and grid graphs.

The person responsible for the content of this page: Bc. Veronika Dvořáková